Nora talks with the Art Review about children’s books, Greek mythology, and punishing people she wants to punish (in her imagination, that is).
At the "Wuthering Heights" UK Premiere, Margot Robbie divided the internet with her outfit: a dress made of hair and a replica of a piece of Victorian mourning jewelry made from Emily and Anne Brontë's hair. Camille looks to the RISD Museum's jewelry collection, investigating how 19th-century families turned locks of hair into sentimental, stunning jewelry and unravels a 200-year-old mystery buried in braids, brooches, and one forgotten little girl.
From the Art Review Archive, Spring, 2024: Michael DeLaurier talks with the Review about meditation, house parties, and the transformative power of light.
Rena visits the “Planetarity: Frictions, Fossils, and the Future" exhibition, which was on view at the Gelman Gallery until January 11, 2026.
Can drunkenness ever be holy? Brady examines the employment of drunkenness as a motif for both spiritual admonition and encouragement in the writings of the Church Fathers and the visual propagation of these teachings through early modern depictions of Noah and His Sons.
Ellie meditates on the end of Normall Rockwell's career, through the America that looked radically different from the one that made him famous.






